Friday, February 20, 2009

Chocolate Raspberry Cookie Bars - REDUX!

So, Saturday night, I'm headed out to a Game Night, (UPDATE: Please see update below re: My Dumb) thrown by a few good friends of mine. Part of the tradition of the Game Night is a potluck. Normally, I would bring a dinner-type food. Last time, I brought lasagna rolls (recipe soon to come!) which were, frankly, pretty damn delicious. Alas, I had come late, and by the time I arrived, everyone had finished the dinner foods and wanted only to munch on desserts and snacks. Foiled. Despite the best attempts of the Midnight-Munchies crowd, most of my lasagna remained uneaten and was sent back with a friend. And I learned a valuable lesson: If you're going to show up late to a potluck and you want your food to be eaten, bring a dessert.
So, flipping through my stack of dessert favorites, I stumbled across the recipe for Chocolate Raspberry Cookie Bars that I had blogged about a while back. And I decided, now was the time to give those suckers another try. I doubled the crust, added a chocolate hazelnut layer, an additional raspberry layer, and some other alterations. So, without further ado, I bring you the latest tweaking of the Choco-Raspberry Cookie Bars: REDUX!

Choco-Raspberry Cookie Bars: REDUX!
(adapted from Nestle Classic Recipes' Chocolatey Raspberry Crumb Bars recipe)

2 cups butter, softened
4 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/2 tsp salt
12 oz. package of dark chocolate chips (1 package)
14 oz. sweetened condensed milk (1 can)
1 cup seedless raspberry jam
1/4 cup Nutella
2 oz. white chocolate
Additional chocolate chips (white, dark, or semi sweet) for sprinkling on top.

First things first - preheat that oven to 350 degrees and grease up a 13x9" baking pan. Now to prepare the crust! Whip the butter with an electric mixer until light and creamy. Add in the flour, brown sugar, and salt and mix until crumbly. Now reserve about a cup of dough and set it to the side. Take the rest of the dough and press it into the baking pan, making sure to cover the bottom and a bit of the sides as well. We're going to want to lightly bake this, so stick it in the oven until the edges are golden brown and it is no longer doughy in the center. Mine took around 15-20 minutes, but every oven is different. Keep an eye on yours, trust your gut, and don't worry if it seem a little soft in the center.
Let your crust cool. You don't want it falling apart during the next layer.
While your crust is cooling, prepare the chocolate-hazelnut layer. Melt the white chocolate and Nutella together and stir. BAM. That's your layer. Spread a thin layer onto the bottom of your cookie crust and let cool. I stuck mine in the freezer for a few minutes to harden.
Once it's fairly cool, GENTLY spread a thin layer of raspberry (1/2-3/4 cup) on top of the hazelnut layer. I did mine by just spooning little piles of raspberry jam on the bottom and gently pushing them into a full layer.
Now set your crust aside for a bit to set while you prepare one of the most delicious layers- the chocolate fudge layer. Melt your 12 oz. of chocolate chips with your can of sweetened condensed milk. Stir. Yes, it looks THAT GOOD. I reccomend using a dark chocolate here because it balances out the ultra-sweet-creamy-richness that the sweetened condensed milk provides. I personally ran out of the DARK chocolate and instead used Godiva semi-sweet chocolate chips with 2 oz. of 100% baking chocolate. So, results may very.
ANYHOW, pour your fudge layer into your cookie crust and spread evenly.
Now, as to the topping. Sprinkle your additional chocolate chips on top as well as intermittent dabs of the remaining raspberry jam. Don't forget that cookie crust you set aside in the beginning! You can either crumble the remaining crust onto the top of the bars (like I did the first time around, and it came out great) or you can try what I did this time around (if you have the patience and motivation for it). Cookie Cutters! I cut out various shapes of dough with cookie cutters and decorated the top of my bars with them. It was pretty neat, but also entirely cosmetic.
Once you've finished topping your bars, stick them back in the oven for another 15-20 minutes, or until the cookie topping is looking golden and the chocolate is melted. Then, remove, let cool completely, and get ready for deliciousness!


ENJOY!
~Chef Z

Post Notes (Updated- 2/21):
1) I am not a photographer, CLEARLY.
2) The crust on the side really helped. However, all that crust also made me realize that the cookie crust in this recipe isn't anything to write home about. It's good, but not really up to the level I like. This will have to be revised.
3) The extra raspberry jam was a good choice. There was a hint of hazelnut, but not a lot. So if you want more hazelnut in the bar, double the hazelnut/chocolate layer.
4) Th chocolate layer came out rich and chocolatey without being TOO rich. Again, score.
5) I used Godiva White Chocolate Chips on top and apparently, they are not made for melting easily. The just sort of browned, instead. Will probably go a different route next time around.
6) The cookie cutter shapes came out well and kept shape, but unless I have a good reason to pretty-up the bars, I will probably go back to crumbling dough on the top. Also, definitely more jam and chocolate chips, next time.

*UPDATE*
Another important lesson to learn:

Friday =/= Saturday.

Apparently, Game Night was TONIGHT and not TOMORROW NIGHT as I had thought.
And we've learned ANOTHER important lesson. It doesn't matter what you bake for a potluck, IF YOU NEVER SHOW UP TO THE POTLUCK.
Apparently, I take dumbassery to a whole new level.
Someone's got to eat these bars, dammit!
-Z

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